2. Get your readers involved

You don’t always have to do all the typing. Write a post for your readers to get involved, and let them provide most of the information.

Either ask a question, conduct a poll, or request a debate on a controversial topic. Doing this gives you a small break, while still getting great feedback, and adding interactivity to your blog.

3. Blog about something different

This is what I’m doing now. I’m still writing about something I believe my readers will care about, but it’s not my basic design technique or tutorial.

Getting out of your own trend can make things more interesting. You’ll probably learn something along the way too.

4. Read other blogs

Other blogs can be inspiring, and may even be the reason you started blogging in the first place. Take in what other blogs are writing about and how they’re writing it.

It’s not that you should look for other blogs and post the same titles. Reading other blogs, however, may help you discover something you’re interested in, or give you a similar idea of what you’d like to blog about.

Better yet, getting familiar with blogs you love gives you a better definition of yourself and your interests.

5. Make an easy post

Posting doesn’t always have to take hours. Well thought-out articles that are informative are best, but sometimes keeping your readers updated can be just as useful. Post something interesting you’ve found, a poll or question, or a site update.

A lot of blogs will create posts like “10 Web Design Tutorials”, or “25 Great CSS Hacks”. This are useful to the reader, but don’t take a lot of writing on your part.

6. Conduct a poll

Sometimes a post can be as simple as conducting a poll or asking a question. By putting it in a post, you’ll get much better feedback than if it were on your sidebar, and you’ll get more in-depth results.

That post can add a lot of interactivity to your blog, making it all about the opinions of your readers. After the poll is complete, you can build upon the feedback you recieved for a longer, more informative post.

7. Read your archives

Reading your own archives provides a lot of benefits. Among these are:

They can remind you of a topic you haven’t written on in awhile.

You can see what posts your readers commented more on.

You can see what categories may be a bit bare, while others are full of content. This can help you add more variety to your blog.

You can read older comments to see what people liked/dislikes about previous types of posts.

Reading archives will provide more motivation to blog, but may also provide a better sense of what to blog for the sake of your visitors.

8. Build upon an existing idea

Whether you’ve found a post by somebody else or by your own archives, build upon it. Do this especially if you see a particular post with a lot of attention. It is likely that the readers will want more if you build upon the same idea in a second post.

9. Analyze your interests

As time goes on, interests change, and sometimes change back. It’s important to keep up with your own interests when you blog. There is a good chance it will still apply to your blog’s niche, and you’ll be giving your visitors more variety. Also, chances are, your visitor’s interests change too.

For example, sometimes I can easily get into a design phase where I love learning anything and everything about the design aspect of being a webmaster. At other times, I love to learn programming languages or build upon my current knowledge of them. Sometimes, I just want to know more about the analytics of my own website and how others grow.

If you feel writing on a certain topic is seeming to be a chore, feel free to explore other options. Forcing yourself to write on a specific topic may, unknowingly, create badly written posts.

10. Just do it

Sometimes the best way to get out of a blogging rut is do just force yourself to blog. Often times our lives get busy and we distract ourselves enough that forget why we enjoy blogging in the first place.

An old teacher once told me, “Starting the assignment is 50% of the work.” There is a lot of truth in what he said. Giving yourself the discipline to do something is a large part of doing any project. Once you start, though, you’re already half way done.

This is not to say that blogging, or anything else you’re interested in, is supposed to be work. Anything can feel like work if you get bored with it. There is always that one ounce of motivation, though, that got you to start blogging in the first place. Get in there and start blogging again, and your motivation should soon return.

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Kayla Knight is a 20 year old college student, part-time web developer, freelancer, and blogger. Webitect is where she spends too much of her freetime, sharing interesting finds and valuable resources. Be sure to check out her portfolio.

I am following your post for a while now and I really like to read what you have to say! You really spend a lot of time to help your readers in certain situations. I like that you write everything really easy without the use of difficult words, which makes it easier for me to read your posts, because my motherlanguege is German and I don’t know every single translation of every single word.

I really like this post! i think I will re-read it later and follow your advise, because right now I sometimes really don’t feel like blogging at all. Your tips are great and I already started a new series on my blog, but only have posted 3 posts on that series. I just can’t think of what to post about next in that topic, but with your tips I think I will sit down and take some time to get an idea on what to blog about next.

Great ideas! I definitely enjoy reading blog posts that are like “10 ways to .. bla bla bla” – they can be so interesting! I’ll definitely keep this entry in mind. I think the whole “series of posts” idea is good too. I may try that sometime

Hey, I’m really liking this site so far and this article is quite good, but I just thought I’d point out one thing:

“Iâ€™ve started the jQuery tutorial series, and although their coming out slowly, it always gives me something to work on. As another example, a writer at Problogger has created a series of articles dedicated to â€œMoving Your Blog to the Next Levelâ€.”

In the first section, it shouldn’t be ‘their coming out’ but rather ‘they’re coming out’

…It’s quite minor, but I just thought I’d point it out as it stuck out at me and nagged at my mind.

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